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Originally posted by templar knight
I think this "graphene" will be massive - a new stable Carbon allotrope - easy to make and they have not even started with its electrical properties yet!
Originally posted by Kram09
Interesting....but this stuff has been around for a while.
Making the new graphene-based light-emitting electrochemical cells (LECs) can involve just liquid solutions or a printing press-style machine. That paves the way for inexpensive production of plastic-based lighting or displays. The researchers envision flexible LEC sheets that could be rolled up or placed almost anywhere.
Originally posted by hypervalentiodine
reply to post by SaturnFX
They've been discussing it for a relatively long time, you're right. Carbon nanotubes are a great material, but current efforts haven't really managed to get past a millimeter or so in length. Similarly, graphene paper hasn't been made much larger than 5 inches - hardly enough to apply in a commercial sense.
A product based on their discovery in '85? Read the literature. There are thousands of papers put there using all manner of graphene and fullerene based product for various 'products'. It didn't just start with the birth of graphene paper.
There is no suppression here. It was only made for the first time in 2007 and graphene, 2004. There is mountains of work being done on both. Bucky balls and nanotubes even more. All you have to do is search the scientific literature. Just because it isn't glaringly apparent and reported in the media doesn't mean it is being suppressed, you just aren't looking for it.edit on 23-4-2011 by hypervalentiodine because: (no reason given)
Buckminsterfullerene is a spherical molecule with the formula C60. It was first prepared in 1985 by Harold Kroto, James Heath, Sean O'Brien, Robert Curl and Richard Smalley at Rice University.[1] Kroto, Curl, and Smalley were awarded the 1996 Nobel Prize in Chemistry for their roles in the discovery of buckminsterfullerene and the related class of molecules, the fullerenes. The name is an homage to Richard Buckminster Fuller, whose geodesic domes it resembles. Buckminsterfullerene was the first fullerene molecule discovered and it is also the most common in terms of natural occurrence, as it can be found in small quantities in soot.
Originally posted by hypervalentiodine
reply to post by SaturnFX
25 years is quite a realistic time frame, really. I understand the frustration though. It's equally as frustrating for scientists, trust me.
To answer your last question, a unified effort towards a common goal spuds wonderful. But tell me, what goal should we choose?
Originally posted by TheyWontBelieveU
A colleague and I were discussing this, and wondering if this same paper thin Graphene could stop a bullet? We're assuming they're saying it's 10 times stronger than the best milled steel on this planet. There I'm back on topic again
Originally posted by Thepreye
Originally posted by TheyWontBelieveU
A colleague and I were discussing this, and wondering if this same paper thin Graphene could stop a bullet? We're assuming they're saying it's 10 times stronger than the best milled steel on this planet. There I'm back on topic again
Could 10 paper thicknesses of best milled steel stop a bullet, I doubt it, it's obviously a very useful material but let's not go overboard.